Senegal

🇸🇳

Phone Code

+221

Capital

Dakar

Population

17 Million

Native Name

Sénégal

Region

Africa

Western Africa

Timezone

Greenwich Mean Time

UTC±00

Senegal is a 196,000-square-kilometre West African country on the Atlantic coast, bordered by Mauritania, Mali, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau and surrounding the Gambia (an enclave that runs along the Gambia river). Around 17 million people share an unusually stable democracy — Senegal has never experienced a coup d'état since independence from France in 1960, and has handed power between governing parties at the ballot box on multiple occasions. Dakar, the capital, sits on the Cap-Vert Peninsula at the westernmost point of mainland Africa; the metropolitan area holds 3.5 million people, French colonial architecture, the modern Plateau financial district and a coastline that runs from busy fishing pirogues at Soumbédioune to the surf breaks of N'Gor and Yoff. French is the official language, inherited from colonial-era schooling, and remains the language of administration, business, higher education and the press; Wolof is the lingua franca spoken by more than 80 percent of the population, with Pulaar, Serer, Diola, Mandinka and Soninké as additional national languages. The country is around 95 percent Muslim — the powerful Sufi brotherhoods (Mouride, Tijaniyya) shape both religious and social life, with the Touba mosque and the annual Magal pilgrimage as central institutions. Senegal's cultural exports — the mbalax music of Youssou N'Dour and Baaba Maal, the négritude poetry of Léopold Sédar Senghor (first president and member of the Académie française), the cinema of Ousmane Sembène and Mati Diop, the cuisine of thieboudienne and yassa — give the country a global cultural footprint disproportionate to its size. Visitors come for the Île de Gorée UNESCO heritage site, the Saint-Louis colonial city (also UNESCO), the Saloum Delta wetlands, the Pink Lake (Lac Rose) salt-harvesting landscape, the Petite Côte resort coast, and the legendary Senegalese hospitality — teranga — that defines the country's tourism brand.

Visa Requirements for Senegal

Senegal is one of West Africa's more accessible countries for international tourism. Citizens of the European Union, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and many other countries enter visa-free for stays of up to 90 days. Citizens of ECOWAS member states (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo) enter visa-free for 90 days using a national identity card or passport under the regional free-movement protocol. Other nationalities apply for an e-visa through the Senegalese government portal at evisa.gouv.sn (90-day single entry, around USD 50, processing typically 5–7 working days) or — where consular missions exist — at a Senegalese embassy or consulate. A passport valid for at least six months from the date of entry, return or onward ticket, and proof of accommodation are required. One health requirement is firm: a yellow fever vaccination certificate is mandatory for all travellers entering Senegal, and the certificate must show vaccination at least ten days before arrival. Visa rules and exemption lists have changed several times in the past decade — always verify the current rules for your nationality on the official portal or with a Senegalese embassy before booking. The main international entry point is Dakar's Blaise Diagne International Airport (DSS), 50 km from the city centre. Senegal is generally regarded as one of the safest West African countries for tourism, with the Casamance region in the south the main exception — government advisories typically recommend caution there.

Common Visa Types

Visa-Free Entry (90 Days)

90 days from entry; passport valid at least 6 months beyond date of entry; return or onward ticket and accommodation proof; mandatory yellow fever vaccination certificate at the border.

Tourism, business and family visits for citizens of around eighty visa-exempt countries — including the entire EU, US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea and most Latin American countries.

ECOWAS Visa-Free Entry (90 Days)

90 days using national ID card or passport; ECOWAS members: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo; yellow fever certificate still required.

Free movement for citizens of ECOWAS member states under the regional free-movement protocol.

E-Visa (90 Days)

90 days single entry; apply at evisa.gouv.sn; processing 5–7 working days; cost around USD 50; passport valid 6+ months, photo, yellow fever certificate, return ticket and accommodation proof; print the approval to present at arrival.

Tourism and business for citizens of countries not on the visa-free list, applied online through the official Senegalese government portal.

Long-Stay Visa & Carte de Séjour

Long-stay visa applied at a Senegalese consulate, then a carte de séjour (residence card) issued in Senegal for 1–2 years and renewable; specific supporting documents per category; processing 4–8 weeks at the consular stage.

Stays of more than 90 days for work in Senegal's growing oil and gas, fisheries, NGO and development sectors, study at Université Cheikh Anta Diop in Dakar, family reunification or retirement.

Important Travel Information

Citizens of the EU, US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and many other countries enter visa-free for 90 days; ECOWAS citizens also visa-free for 90 days; e-visa at evisa.gouv.sn (around USD 50) for other nationalities.

Yellow fever vaccination certificate is mandatory for all travellers entering Senegal — the certificate must show vaccination at least 10 days before arrival; check this requirement well in advance of departure.

Passport valid for at least six months from date of entry; return or onward ticket and accommodation proof should be ready.

Travel Guide

Senegal rewards travellers who like dense culture, unhurried coastal landscapes and a stable, welcoming country to ease into West Africa. Dakar is the natural starting point — the Plateau financial district, the colonial-era Gorée ferry terminal, the Sandaga and Marché HLM markets, the African Renaissance Monument on the Mamelles headland and the surf and fishing beaches of N'Gor and Yoff. Île de Gorée, the UNESCO World Heritage island twenty minutes off Dakar by ferry, holds the Maison des Esclaves (House of Slaves) memorial — the most-visited memorial site of the Atlantic slave trade in West Africa, where Mandela, Obama and Pope John Paul II have all paid respects — alongside narrow car-free streets of pastel colonial buildings, art galleries and small beaches. Saint-Louis, four hours north on the Senegal River, was the capital of French West Africa from 1895 to 1902 and is itself UNESCO-listed: Faidherbe Bridge (designed by Gustave Eiffel's firm), pastel colonial blocks on the river island, horse-drawn calèches, and the annual Saint-Louis Jazz Festival in May. The Lac Rose (Pink Lake), 30 minutes from Dakar, is a high-salinity lagoon where Dunaliella algae turn the water pink in dry season — a working salt-harvesting landscape and a regular postcard image. Down the Atlantic coast, the Petite Côte resort strip from Saly through Mbour, La Somone and Joal-Fadiouth has been the Senegalese beach hub for European charters since the 1980s. The Saloum Delta — UNESCO biosphere reserve south of Joal-Fadiouth — is mangrove and birdwatching country with overnight pirogue trips. Inland, Niokolo-Koba National Park in the southeast is the country's flagship wildlife reserve, while the Casamance south of the Gambia is a distinct cultural region with palm forests, river villages and a separate pace — but check current government advisories for that region. Cuisine — thieboudienne (the national fish-and-rice dish), yassa poulet, mafé, dibi (grilled lamb), bissap and ginger juice, attaya (three-round mint tea ritual) — is one of West Africa's most exported and one of Senegal's most reliable pleasures.

Ways to Experience This Destination

Île de Gorée & Atlantic Slave-Trade Memorial

The UNESCO-listed island of Gorée, twenty minutes by ferry from Dakar, holds the Maison des Esclaves memorial to the Atlantic slave trade — one of the most visited memorial sites in West Africa, with Mandela, Obama and Pope John Paul II among visiting heads of state. Beyond the memorial, the car-free island holds pastel French colonial buildings, the Henriette Bathily Women's Museum, the Castel viewpoint and small beaches. Allow a half-day; the ferry runs every 1–2 hours from Dakar's Gare Maritime.

Saint-Louis — French West African Capital

Saint-Louis, on a Senegal River island four hours north of Dakar, was the capital of French West Africa from 1895 to 1902 and is UNESCO-listed for its remarkably preserved pastel French colonial architecture. The metal Faidherbe Bridge (designed by Gustave Eiffel's firm in 1897) connects the island to the mainland; horse-drawn calèches, narrow streets, river-front pirogues and the annual Saint-Louis Jazz Festival in May complete the experience. The nearby Djoudj National Bird Sanctuary is a UNESCO biosphere reserve and a major migratory-bird wintering site.

Lac Rose (Pink Lake) & Salt-Harvesting Landscape

Lac Rose (Lac Retba) is a shallow lagoon 30 km from Dakar where Dunaliella salina algae turn the water pink during the dry season (November to June). The lake's salinity is comparable to the Dead Sea and supports a working salt-harvesting community of mostly migrant Malian and Burkinabé workers; visitors can swim (extreme buoyancy), take a pirogue out to the salt mounds, ride camels along the surrounding dunes and continue to the nearby Atlantic. A typical half-day trip from Dakar.

Petite Côte, Saloum Delta & Atlantic Beaches

South of Dakar the Atlantic coast opens into the Petite Côte beach strip — Saly, Mbour, La Somone, Joal-Fadiouth — a long-standing European charter destination with white sand, palm-lined hotels and warm Atlantic. Past Joal-Fadiouth (a striking shell-paved island town) lies the UNESCO-listed Saloum Delta of mangrove channels, oyster bars and overnight pirogue trips, with Toubacouta and Palmarin as bases for birdwatching and fisherman-village stays.

Music, Cinema & Senegalese Cultural Capital

Senegal is one of Africa's strongest cultural exporters per capita — the mbalax music of Youssou N'Dour and Baaba Maal, the rap and hip-hop of Daara J and PBS Radio Khoor, the cinema of Ousmane Sembène and Mati Diop (Cannes Grand Prix winner 2019), the négritude poetry of first president Léopold Sédar Senghor (Académie française member). Dakar's clubs (Just 4 U, Thiossane), the IFAN and Théodore Monod art museums, the Black Civilizations Museum and the Saint-Louis Jazz Festival in May anchor the cultural calendar.

Teranga, Cuisine & Sufi Senegal

Teranga — the Wolof concept of hospitality — is the country's tourism brand and a real social value. Practical face: thieboudienne (the national rice-and-fish dish), yassa poulet (chicken in onion-lemon sauce), mafé (peanut stew), dibi (grilled lamb), the three-round attaya mint-tea ritual. Religiously, around 95 percent of Senegalese are Muslim, mostly affiliated with the Mouride and Tijaniyya Sufi brotherhoods; the Touba Great Mosque (Mouride centre) and the annual Magal pilgrimage to Touba are among the largest religious gatherings in West Africa.

Money & Currency

Money & Currency
CFA

West African CFA Franc (XOF)

Currency code: XOF

Practical Money Tips

West African CFA Franc (XOF) — Pegged to the Euro

Senegal uses the West African CFA franc (XOF), pegged to the euro at a fixed rate of 1 EUR = 655.96 XOF. Euros are easily exchanged at banks and bureaux de change in Dakar. US dollars are also exchangeable but at slightly less favourable rates.

Good ATM Coverage in Dakar, Scarcer Elsewhere

Ecobank, Société Générale, BDK, and CBAO have ATMs widely distributed in Dakar. Saint-Louis, Ziguinchor, and Touba have some coverage. Remote areas and the Casamance have very limited ATM access — withdraw enough cash in Dakar before heading south or east.

Cards at Hotels and Some Restaurants

Visa and Mastercard are accepted at most hotels, larger restaurants, and supermarkets in Dakar. Outside the capital, cash is dominant. Orange Money and Wave are popular mobile payment platforms widely used by locals.

Cash Essential Outside Dakar

Outside the capital, markets, street food, taxis, and guesthouses operate in cash. Carry XOF for daily expenses. Small denominations (500, 1,000, 2,000 XOF) are useful for markets and tipping.

Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.

Common Money Questions

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